Showing posts with label Earn Money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earn Money. Show all posts

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Best Adult Traffic Networks – Buy/Sell Adult Traffic

In this post I am listing Adult Traffic Sources which is requested by many readers. When we talk about adult many people blush but this is the fact that Adult is most surfed and search term online.
Adult sites get more traffic than any other popular sites. Generating traffic from adult sites can be a great way. From adult sites you just not generate traffic to adult related product or service, but you can generate traffic for any other product or service. If target right any site can benefit from adult traffic, I have read a case study of Food Store who advertised on adult site and was getting good conversions.
Most of the time adult sites get advertisement for other adult site, adult dating, cam site or adult related products. Lot of affiliate use adult traffic to drive traffic for adult dating offers.
Now most of the adult traffic networks offer targeting for Web, Mobile and Tablet so you’re targeting can be more accurate as you want. With this affiliates and webmaster can promote mobile offers from adult traffic.
Here is the list of Best Adult Traffic Networks for Buyers and Publishers. Go ahead and look at these adult traffic sources and start advertising or earning.

10 Best Adult Traffic Source

1. EroAdvertising

EroAdvertising is one of the most popular adult advertising networks. EroAdvertising offer PPC, CPM and period based advertising solution. EroAdvertising serves ad in more than 200 countries. Adult site owner can earn can join EroAdvertising as publisher and they pay weekly or monthly basis. For advertiser EroAdvertising offers conversion tracking which will help advertisers to find converting spots. EroAdvertising also offer Mobile advertising one can target by mobile platform.
Adult Traffic Sources

2. ExoClick

ExoClick is fourth largest advertising network in the World. ExoClick offer ad solution for web, mobile, tablet etc. There are various advertising options for advertisers like display banner, In-video ads, Popunder, Interstitial ad etc. ExoClick offer CPC, CPM and fixed price ads. For publisher ExoClick offers weekly and monthly payment by various payment gateways.
Adult Traffic Sources

3. TrafficJunky

TrafficJunky is self-serve advertising network which offers CPM based advertising solution for Web, Mobile, and Tablet. TrafficJunky can serve 141+ million daily visitors which is very big inventory. TrafficJunky also offer publisher program, publisher are paid weekly by various payment gateway. TrafficJunky gives lot of targeting options to advertisers by which they can target to right audience at low price.
Adult Traffic Sources

4. JuicyAds

JuicyAds is leader in direct ad sales network. Advertisers can buy ads on particular website with the help of JuicyAds. Publisher can sell ads at fixed price with the help of JuicyAds and advertiser buys that spot at fixed price for days or monthly contract. Advertiser can also run RON (Run of Network) ads which are CPC or CPM based. With JuicyAds you can find quality inventory at low price.
Adult Traffic Sources

5. TrafficFactory

TrafficFactory is another popular adult traffic source with half a Billion daily page views. TrafficFactory offers real-time bidding with lots of targeting options. Target by devices, Geo, day parting, spend limit and much more. TrafficFactory offers Display, Pop Under and Contextual traffic.
Adult Traffic Sources

6. Traffic Force

7. Adultmoda

8. AdXpansion

9. Adbucks

10. AdultAdWorld

Hope you liked these Adult Traffic Networks. Please share your experience with these networks by commenting below.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

How To Make Money Fast

Make Money Fast (or MAKE.MONEY.FAST) is a title of an electronically forwarded chain letter which became so infamous that the term is now used to describe all sorts of chain letters forwarded over the Internet, by e-mail spam or Usenet newsgroups. In anti-spammer slang, the name is often abbreviated "MMF".
The original "Make Money Fast" letter was written around 1988 by a person who used the name Dave Rhodes. Biographical details are not certain, and it is not clear if this was even the person's actual name. The letter encouraged readers of the email to forward one dollar in cash to a list of people provided in the text, and to add their own name and address to the bottom of the list after deleting the name and address at the top.[1] Using the theory behind pyramid schemes, the resulting chain of money flowing back and forth would supposedly deliver a reward of thousands of dollars to the ones participating in the chain, as copies of their chain spread and more and more people sent one dollar to their address.

According to the FAQ of the net.legends Usenet news group, Dave Rhodes was a student at Columbia Union College (now Washington Adventist University), a Seventh Day Adventist college in Maryland, who wrote the letter and uploaded it as a text file to a nearby BBS around 1987.[2] The earliest posting to Usenet was posted by a David Walton in 1989, also using a Columbia Union College account. Walton referred to himself as, "BIZMAN DAVE THE MODEM SLAVE", and referred to "Dave Rhodes" in his post.[3] The true identity of Dave Rhodes has not been found. A supposed self-published web site by Dave Rhodes was found to be fake.[4][5][4]

The scam was forwarded over e-mail and Usenet. By 1994 "Make Money Fast" became one of the most persistent spams with multiple variations.[6][7] The chain letters follow a rigidly predefined format or template with minor variations (such as claiming to be from a retired lawyer or claiming to be selling "reports" in order to attempt to make the scheme appear lawful). They quickly became repetitive, causing them to be bait for widespread satire or parody. One widespread parody begins with the subject of, "GET.ARRESTED.FAST" and the line, "Hi, I'm Dave Rhodes, and I'm in jail".[8] Another parody sent around in academic circles is, "Make Tenure Fast", substituting the sending of money to individuals on a list with listing journal citations.
The text of the letter originally claimed this practice is "perfectly legal", citing Title 18, Sections 1302 & 1341 of the postal lottery laws.[1] The U.S. Postal Inspection Service cites Title 18, United States Code, Section 1302 when it asserts the illegality of chain letters, including the "Make Money Fast" scheme:[10]
“     There's at least one problem with chain letters. They're illegal if they request money or other items of value and promise a substantial return to the participants. Chain letters are a form of gambling, and sending them through the mail (or delivering them in person or by computer, but mailing money to participate) violates Title 18, United States Code, Section 1302, the Postal Lottery Statute (Chain letters that ask for items of minor value, like picture postcards or recipes, may be mailed, since such items are not things of value within the meaning of the law).     ”

It also asserts that, "Regardless of what technology is used to advance the scheme, if the mail is used at any step along the way, it is still illegal."[10] The U.S. Postal Inspection Service asserts the mathematical impossibility that all participants will be winners, as well as the possibilities that participants may fail to send money to the first person listed, and the perpetrator may have been listed multiple times under different addresses and names, thus ensuring that all the money goes to the same person.[10]

In recent years, one avenue that spammers have used to circumvent the postal laws, is to conduct business by non-postal routes, such as sending an email message and instructing recipients to send money via electronic services such as Paypal. While the specific laws mentioned above will only be violated if regular postal mail is used at some point during the process of communication,[11] the sending of chain letters is often prohibited by the terms of service and/or user agreements of many email providers, and can result in your account being suspended or revoked.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Pay-per-view

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pay-per-view (PPV) provides a service by which a television audience can purchase events to view via private telecast. The broadcaster shows the event at the same time to everyone ordering it (as opposed to video-on-demand systems, which allow viewers to see recorded broadcasts at any time). Events can be purchased using an on-screen guide, an automated telephone system, or through a live customer service representative. Events often include feature films, sporting events and entertainment.

United States

The Zenith Phonevision system became the first pay-per-view system tested in the United States. Developed in 1951, it used telephone lines to take and receive orders as well as to de-scramble a broadcast signal. Phonevision field-tests ran for 90 days in Chicago. The system used IBM punched cards to de-scramble a signal broadcast during the broadcast station's "off-time". Both systems showed promise, but the FCC denied them permits.[1] One of the earliest pay-per-view systems on cable, the Optical Systems Channel 100, first entered service in 1972 in San Diego through Mission Cable[2] (acquired by Cox Communications) and TheaterVisioN, which operated out of Sarasota, Florida. These early systems quickly went out of business, as the cable industry adopted satellite technology and as flat-rate systems like Home Box Office became popular.
Boxing fans were first introduced to their sport on pay-per-view with the Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier fight "Thrilla In Manila", there was also another in 1980, when Roberto Duran defeated Sugar Ray Leonard. Cable companies offered the match for $10, and about 155,000 customers paid to watch the fight.[3]
A major pay-per-view event[citation needed] occurred on September 16, 1981, when Sugar Ray Leonard fought Thomas "Hitman" Hearns for the Welterweight Championship. Viacom Cablevision in Nashville, Tennessee, the first system to offer the event, sold over fifty percent of its subscribers for the fight.[citation needed] Leonard visited Nashville to promote the fight, and the event proved such a success that Viacom themed its annual report for that year around it.[citation needed] Viacom's Marketing Director was Pat Thompson who put together the fight and subsequently put together additional PPV fights, wrestling matches, and even a Broadway play.[citation needed]
After leaving Viacom, Thompson became head of Sports View and produced the first pay-per-view football game on October 16, 1983, when Tennessee played Alabama from Birmingham, Alabama.[citation needed] Sports View played a role in building pay-per-view networks[citation needed] and became the early pioneer in developing TigerVision for LSU, TideVision for Alabama, and UT Vol Seat for Tennessee. Sports View also produced the Ohio State-Michigan Football game on PPV in November 1983.
In 1985, the first U.S. cable channels devoted to pay-per-view, Viewer's Choice, Cable Video Store, First Choice, and Request TV began operation within days of each other.[citation needed] Viewer's Choice serviced both home satellite-dish and cable customers, while Request TV, though broadcasting to cable viewers, would not become available to dish-owners until the 1990s.[citation needed]
First Choice PPV was available on Rogers Cablesystems in the United States and Canada. When Paragon Cablesystems acquired the Rogers Cablesystems in San Antonio, Texas First Choice continued until 1996 when Time Warner Cable bought Paragon Cablesystems in San Antonio, Texas.
The term "pay-per-view" did not come into general use until the late 1980s[citation needed] when companies like iN DEMAND, HBO, and Showtime started using the system to show movies and some of their productions. In Demand would show movies, concerts, and other events, with live sporting events such as WrestleMania predominant. Prices ranging from $3.99 to $49.99, while HBO and Showtime, with their legs TVKO and SET Pay Per View, would offer championship boxing with prices ranging from $14.99 to $54.99.[citation needed]
ESPN has shown college football and basketball games on pay-per-view.[citation needed] The boxing undercard Latin Fury, shown on June 28, 2003, became ESPN's first boxing pay-per-view card and also the first pay-per-view boxing card held in Puerto Rico.[citation needed] Pay-per-view has provided a revenue stream for professional wrestling companies like World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), Ring of Honor (ROH) and Asistencia Asesoría y Administración.
In the United States pay-per-view broadcasters transmit without advertisements, unlike almost all other broadcasters.
Vince McMahon, the chairman of World Wrestling Entertainment, is considered by many as one of the icons of pay-per-view promotion. He owns the rights to payperview.com, which redirects to the WWE website.

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